In this Nov. 24, 1981 file photo, Weather Underground member Judith Clark is handcuffed as she is escorted into Rockland County Courthouse, in New City, N.Y. (David Handschuh/AP)

A retired Nyack cop wounded in the 1981 Brinks murders and the son of a man slain in the infamous robbery are challenging a state parole board’s ruling to release Judith Clark, claiming one board member failed to disclose sensitive personal information prior to her decision.

In a May 13 state Supreme Court petition, retired Nyack Police Detective Arthur Keenan and Michael Paige claim parole board member Tana Agostini should have disclosed that she is “married to a convicted murderer who was sentenced to 25 years to life.”

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Keenan and Paige go on in their court filing to contend that Agostini, while working with a former parole board chairman, fought for the release of the man she’s now married to — information they claim she also didn’t reveal during Clark’s parole proceedings.

They slammed her conduct in the legal brief as “improper."

“The process was fatally flawed,” said Mark Blanchard, an attorney for Keenan and Paige. “We’re asking that it go back and be done over.”

In this file photo, former Weather Underground member Judith Clark poses for a photo with one of the service dogs that she trained at the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility in Bedford, N.Y. Clark was granted parole Wednesday, April 17, 2019, after serving more than 37 years behind bars for her role as getaway driver in a 1981 Brinks armored truck robbery that left two police officers and a security guard dead. (Amelia Evans/AP)

Michael Paige is the son of the late Peter Paige, a Brinks’ armored truck guard killed during the $1.6 million heist carried out by six men at the Nanuet Mall in Rockland County. Two police were also killed in what widely came to be regarded as a “terroristic” crime.

Clark, a political radical, acted as one of the crew’s getaway car drivers and reached for a gun when approached by the police. She was sentenced to 75 years in prison for her role in the murder-robbery, but in a controversial move, Gov. Cuomo commuted her sentence to 35 years in 2016, making her eligible for parole.

“The careful and thorough decision by the parole board was grounded in all applicable law," they said in a written statement. "We are confident that a judge reviewing the process and the record will find that the board in all respects acted legally and appropriately. “